Research Interests

Current Projects

Seeking to link these basic findings in mice with conditions in humans (asthma, atopic dermatitis), and to dissect out recent discovery that serum complement components, a system of more than 9 labile enzymatic and fragmenting proteins in the blood, also participate in these critical interactions leading to T cell recruitment in cell mediated immunity in vivo; role of RNA in a T cell suppressor factor relevant to hematopoietic cancers--cDNA cloning and identification of the RNA portion of the TsF, determining the biological properties of the cloned TsF RNA, towards eventual therapy of malignancies

Research Summary

The dissection of crucial cellular and molecular interactions guiding the traffic and eventual recruitment of antigen-specific T cells, out of the blood vessels, and into the tissues, at specific sites of immune reactivity, such as allergic responses (asthma) or protective responses, expulsion of helminth worms from the GI tract, or ticks from the skin.

Have identified that micro-mediators, such as serotonin and leukotrienes, released by mediator-containing cells, such as mast cells or platelets, are of crucial importance in alteration of the local vasculature to allow penetration into the tissues by antigen-specific T cells, that arrive and interact with local antigen-presenting cells that present relevant peptides of antigens, causing release of cytokines by the T cells, to mediate local inflammation and allergy, or in contrast, immune protection and resistance.

Extensive Research Description

An immensely exciting project in
our laboratory stems from our recent discovery that a T cell suppressive factor
(TsF) that inhibits effector Th1 and Th2 cells in vivo, contains an RNA that is
a small, double-stranded RNA. We
postulate it is a regulatory miRNA (likely in a pre-miRNA), that acts by being
transported between cells; from the suppressive T cells to target effector T
cells cells via exosomes [suppressor cell secreted nanovesicles (50-100nm) that
contain proteins, RNA and miRNA] to suppress immune responses. The effect produced
is systematic and thus endocrine in nature. Further, similar suppressive
exosomes can be found in the blood serum of mice tolerized to induce the
suppressive T cells that release supernatant of TsF RNA in exosomes, and
clinically in the blood of patients with cancer, autoimunity, allergy etc. This cell to cell transfer, in a mammalian
system. of active genetic information for immunoregulation is unprecedented and
paradigm breaking.

It is likely that interference with
this newly recognized mode of antigen-specific T cell suppression can be used
therapeutically, or inhibited with antagomirs where indicated. Antagomirs could act to reverse suppressive miRNA in cancer. This also could create a new pathway in
specific immunotherapy that could compliment existing non-specific treatments,
resulting in less toxic side effects, greater specificity, and safer use
of higher doses of current non-specific
drugs (steroids) and biologics (anti-TNF etc). Alternatively, in vitro
alteration of syngeneic exosomes for in vivo therapeutic use to alter immune
responses, opens an entirely new avenue of possible immunotherapy. Finally, detection and analysis of exosomes
in the blood is a new method of determining the patient’s immune response.